5th day of Fall, 517 AV
Muscles creaked and groaned with thunderous protest as Elias stretched in quiet contemplation. He stood alone upon the training field that particularly stagnant morning, as was his habit of late. He had risen early in hopes of beating the other apprentices out here, for as was custom in the Vitrax, within only a few bells at most these blood-stained sands would be choked anew with dozens of dirty, grunting recruits all reeking of desperation and sweat as they went about their own morning rituals of self-improvement. He was glad for the solitude when he could find it. After so long away, with so much time spent on his own, life back in the barracks was still proving a difficult adjustment, one that continued to elude him even despite his best efforts to reintegrate. Now however, without distraction or worry to cloud his mind, the young stryfer was preparing himself for a standard morning warm up, or at least he had been before a pang of inspiration had taken him by storm.
Inhaling sharply, Elias bounced up and down on the balls of his feet, shaking loose his still sleep exhausted muscles as best he could. Without any more preamble to stall the inevitable, he leaned forward and broke out into a dead sprint down the familiar stretch of track that surrounded the sands. He pushed himself as fast as his unprepared body would tolerate, and then faster still, all the while quietly counting the ticks as he raced ahead.
Thirty
Coming to a beleaguered halt after a moment, the ravokian caught his breath. He wasn’t winded just yet, but his heart was undeniably beating faster. For his troubles though, he’d gained his time to beat. Now it was just a matter of putting that number to the test against his abilities.
Elias, for all his constant pomp and arrogance, understood far too well that he still did not fully grasp the grander intricacies of his own body, let alone the magical pathways that riddled it from head to toe. He’d peeked with Flux abilities a long time ago and had remained content to let them linger as they were since. For whatever reason, unlike his others arcane disciplines which had bloomed over the years since his studies in Zeltiva began, it was his first art, his first delve into the world of magic, that had suffered his indifference the worst. It had been the talent he had learned here, in these very hallowed halls, and the Caldera feared it was because of that reason alone that they had languished so. Nevertheless, he was ready now to put the Flux to use, and better yet, his body along with it.
As he breathed, he slowly tapped into the lingering awareness that drifted on the edge of his consciousness. A complete openness to himself wherein he could feel the very energy that pulsed within. It was random for the most part. A mere acknowledgement of the fact that he was now able to feel -to move- certain parts of that vast river coursing through his body. The grasp on it was unrefined and lacking, thus Elias was limited in his ability to wade through those waters, let alone redirect the current at whim. Still, like a rock placed in the way of a stream, he knew he could cause some change. To that end, the mage focused on redirecting a portion of that current to his legs for today’s purposes.
He found the effort almost immediately draining.
The mental force of pushing against the natural flow of his energy was met with great resistance, as it often was. Pulling more of himself into the focus of adjustment and control, he felt the effects take place more than he could see them.
It was slow, but bit by bit, he’d make it work.
Inhaling sharply, Elias bounced up and down on the balls of his feet, shaking loose his still sleep exhausted muscles as best he could. Without any more preamble to stall the inevitable, he leaned forward and broke out into a dead sprint down the familiar stretch of track that surrounded the sands. He pushed himself as fast as his unprepared body would tolerate, and then faster still, all the while quietly counting the ticks as he raced ahead.
Thirty
Coming to a beleaguered halt after a moment, the ravokian caught his breath. He wasn’t winded just yet, but his heart was undeniably beating faster. For his troubles though, he’d gained his time to beat. Now it was just a matter of putting that number to the test against his abilities.
Elias, for all his constant pomp and arrogance, understood far too well that he still did not fully grasp the grander intricacies of his own body, let alone the magical pathways that riddled it from head to toe. He’d peeked with Flux abilities a long time ago and had remained content to let them linger as they were since. For whatever reason, unlike his others arcane disciplines which had bloomed over the years since his studies in Zeltiva began, it was his first art, his first delve into the world of magic, that had suffered his indifference the worst. It had been the talent he had learned here, in these very hallowed halls, and the Caldera feared it was because of that reason alone that they had languished so. Nevertheless, he was ready now to put the Flux to use, and better yet, his body along with it.
As he breathed, he slowly tapped into the lingering awareness that drifted on the edge of his consciousness. A complete openness to himself wherein he could feel the very energy that pulsed within. It was random for the most part. A mere acknowledgement of the fact that he was now able to feel -to move- certain parts of that vast river coursing through his body. The grasp on it was unrefined and lacking, thus Elias was limited in his ability to wade through those waters, let alone redirect the current at whim. Still, like a rock placed in the way of a stream, he knew he could cause some change. To that end, the mage focused on redirecting a portion of that current to his legs for today’s purposes.
He found the effort almost immediately draining.
The mental force of pushing against the natural flow of his energy was met with great resistance, as it often was. Pulling more of himself into the focus of adjustment and control, he felt the effects take place more than he could see them.
It was slow, but bit by bit, he’d make it work.